The Stability Starts at the Ground Principle
Recovery, Longevity & Athletic Health
“If your feet and ankles can’t control the landing, everything above them has to compensate.”
Why Things Start Feeling Unstable
A lot of adults describe it the same way:
“Something just feels off.”
Not pain.
Not a major injury.
Just unstable.
Especially when:
Moving side-to-side
Changing direction
Catching themselves unexpectedly
We were talking with someone recently who mentioned they didn’t fully trust their footing anymore—especially going down stairs or moving quickly in different directions.
Nothing dramatic.
Just enough hesitation to notice.
And that’s usually how these issues begin.
Where the Problem Usually Starts
When you watch closely, it’s often not a major strength issue.
It starts lower.
At the foot and ankle.
That first point of contact with the ground.
Because if the foot and ankle can’t stabilize properly, everything above them has to adjust.
The knees shift
The hips compensate
Balance becomes harder than it should be
And movement starts feeling less reliable.
A Simple Drill That Reveals a Lot
One movement we use frequently:
🎥 Heiden and Stick
It looks simple.
Jump over.
Land.
Hold the position.
But that landing tells you everything.
The “Stick” Is the Point
Most people rush through this exercise.
They land and immediately move into the next rep.
But the “stick” is the most important part.
That’s where your body learns control.
That’s where your foot and ankle begin doing what they’re supposed to do.
The real question becomes:
Can you control the landing?
Or do you immediately have to catch yourself and reset?
That’s what exposes stability.
Control Creates Confidence
We’ve seen this make a huge difference for people once they slow it down and truly own the landing position.
Nothing flashy.
Just better control.
And once that improves, everything above it usually starts feeling more stable too.
✅ Walking feels smoother
✅ Direction changes feel more confident
✅ Movement feels less hesitant
✅ Balance becomes more reliable
Build Stability From the Ground Up
A lot of people chase the symptom.
But stability usually starts from the ground up.
So if things have been feeling “off” lately, pay attention to what happens when your foot hits the ground.
Can you control it?
Can you stabilize it?
Because that’s often where the real answer starts.
— Coach Shelby & The Shelby Trained Team